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Less Don't. More Do.

Updated: Oct 22

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Some parents instinctively say “No,” “Stop,” or “Don’t” when their child misbehaves. It’s fast, familiar, and often comes from a place of urgency. But toddlers are still learning how to interpret language, regulate emotions, and understand expectations. Vague or reactive commands can confuse more than they correct.


⚠️ The Pitfall: Reactive Commands

When “No,” “Don’t,” “Quit,” or “Stop” become the default, toddlers may:

  • Focus on the behavior you’re trying to stop (“Don’t run” = run)

  • Feel shamed or scolded without knowing what to do instead

  • Repeat the behavior out of confusion, defiance, or attention-seeking


These words do have a place—especially in moments of danger, aggression, or destructive behavior. But when they’re used constantly, they lose their impact and fail to teach what’s expected.


🔄 The Shift: Clear, Positive Guidance

PCIT and other evidence-based approaches encourage telling children what to do—not just what to avoid. Young children thrive on clear, actionable instructions.

Instead of “Don’t yell,” try:


“Use a quiet voice.”


Instead of “Stop running,” say:


“Walk next to me.”


Instead of “Quit whining,” offer:


“Tell me what you need in your calm voice.”



🧠 Why It Works

  • Helps children internalize expectations

  • Reduces power struggles and reactive cycles

  • Builds emotional safety and trust

  • Supports language development and self-regulation


🌱 The Reframe

When we shift from reactive commands to proactive guidance, we teach more than compliance. We teach communication, cooperation, and confidence. And we show our children that boundaries can be clear and kind.

 
 
 

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